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Historical Markers and War Memorials in Lincoln, New Hampshire
North Haverhill is the county seat for Grafton County
Lincoln is in Grafton County
Grafton County (161) ►
ADJACENT TO GRAFTON COUNTY
Belknap County (21) ►
Carroll County (46) ►
Coos County (60) ►
Merrimack County (126) ►
Sullivan County (45) ►
Caledonia County, Vermont (38) ►
Essex County, Vermont (19) ►
Orange County, Vermont (39) ►
Windsor County, Vermont (109) ►
Touch name on this list to highlight map location.
Touch blue arrow, or on map, to go there.
ADJACENT TO GRAFTON COUNTY
Belknap County (21) ►
Carroll County (46) ►
Coos County (60) ►
Merrimack County (126) ►
Sullivan County (45) ►
Caledonia County, Vermont (38) ►
Essex County, Vermont (19) ►
Orange County, Vermont (39) ►
Windsor County, Vermont (109) ►
Touch name on this list to highlight map location.
Touch blue arrow, or on map, to go there.
1 ► New Hampshire, Grafton County, Lincoln — 224 — Betty and Barney Hill Incident — ![]() |
On the night of September 19–20, 1961, Portsmouth, NH couple Betty and Barney Hill experienced a close encounter with an unidentified flying object and two hours of “lost” time while driving south on Rte 3 near Lincoln. They filed . . . — — Map (db m74571) HM |
2 ► New Hampshire, Grafton County, Lincoln — Borasaurus — (Granitus Holus) — ![]() |
Millions of years ago, the borasaurus roamed this area, It was similar in size to a T-Rex but with a large drill like horn on its head. It was his constant sharpening of this horn that produced such a smooth hole in this granite boulder. This rare . . . — — Map (db m97311) HM |
3 ► New Hampshire, Grafton County, Lincoln — Clark's Bridge — ![]() |
Clark's Bridge. Make: Howe Truss. Built: 1904. Weight 200 tons. Capacity 200 tons. Length 116'. Width 21'8". Clearance 20'6" Originally spanned the Winooski River in Barre, VT. Disassembled in 1960 and moved to Lincoln. Reassembled and in service . . . — — Map (db m97238) HM |
4 ► New Hampshire, Grafton County, Lincoln — Loon Mountain — Section of logging railroad — 1893-1947 — ![]() |
Loon Mountain Section of logging railroad 1893-1947 A billion feet of logs were hauled over this track. Lincoln, N.H. — — Map (db m148136) HM |
5 ► New Hampshire, Grafton County, Lincoln — Quinten E. Mulleavey — ![]() |
Quinten E. Mulleavey born Dec. 16, 1948 Friend and dedicated member of the covered bridge project. One of three high school students who at the age of 16 helped move this massive covered bridge over the Pemigewasset River. Missing in . . . — — Map (db m97239) HM WM |
6 ► New Hampshire, Grafton County, Lincoln — Railroads tame the White Mountains — ![]() |
Rivers as roads for lumber In New England, limber and pulp mills traditionally got their wood from logs harvested in the winter and floated downstream during spring floods. Enterprising lumber baron J.E. Henry built a railroad that . . . — — Map (db m105956) HM |
7 ► New Hampshire, Grafton County, Lincoln — The Bear Show — ![]() |
During World War II, the small roadside attraction started by Edward P. and Florence M. Clark, known as Ed Clark's Eskimo Sled Dog Ranch, fell onto disrepair. When their sons, Edward M. and W. Murray Clark returned home from the war, Edward from the . . . — — Map (db m97236) HM |
8 ► New Hampshire, Grafton County, Lincoln — The First Passenger Carrying Aerial Tramway in North America — ![]() |
The First Passenger Carrying Aerial Tramway in North America was erected on Cannon Mountain in Franconia Notch in 1938. When loaded, this tramcar carried 27 passengers to the summit of cannon mountain in 9 minutes. This type of car had served 42 . . . — — Map (db m97237) HM |